123 A. 192 | Vt. | 1924
The action is brought to recover for damage done to certain highways in the plaintiff town. The allegations *338 of the complaint show that in 1911 the Anahama Realty Corporation built a dam across the White River in the town of Sharon, about a mile and a half south of the Village of Sharon; that for some years prior thereto, the Champlain Realty Company had maintained in the river at Sharon Village certain piers which it used in connection with the floating of logs in that stream; that after the dam was built, and on account of the increased depth of water caused thereby, these piers were built up higher than they had existed before; that in the spring of 1921, during the period of the ordinary high water of that season of the year, and while the ice was going out, it jammed on the piers and obstructed and diverted the waters of the stream so that they flowed into and damaged the highways referred to.
The Champlain Realty Company demurred to the complaint on the following grounds: (1) Misjoinder of defendants. (2) Failure to allege that the plaintiff was under any legal obligation to repair these highways. (3) The statute does not authorize the joinder of the defendants. (4) The complaint does not count on the statute.
This demurrer was overruled, the declaration was adjudged sufficient, an exception was saved, and the case was passed to this Court before trial.
First, then, as to the alleged misjoinder: The law of this subject as here involved is fully covered by our own cases. It is, and for many years has been, contrary to the demurrant's contention. While it is true, as here argued, that concert of action or common design is ordinarily essential to joint liability, passive concert or passive community is, in certain circumstances, enough to satisfy the rule. Whenever the separate and independent acts or negligence of several persons, by concurrence, produce a single and indivisible injury which would not have occurred without such concurrence, each is responsible for the entire result, and they may be sued jointly or severally, at the election of the party injured. In such cases, the act or neglect of each is a proximate and an efficient cause, and when several proximate causes contribute to an injury, and each is an efficient cause, without the operation of which the injury would not have been caused, it may be attributed to any or all of such causes. This has come to be the established doctrine of this Court. *339
In Wright v. Cooper et al., 1 Tyl. 425, the plaintiff owned a farm on Otter Creek. The defendant Cooper maintained a dam on the falls at Vergennes extending from an island in the Creek to the westerly shore. This dam was erected before the Revolution and had occasioned no damage to the plaintiff's farm. The defendant Tousey built a dam from the island to the eastern shore. Thereafter, the waters were set back and overflowed the plaintiff's land and caused the damage sued for. Neither of the dams, without the other, could have caused this damage. It was held that the defendants were properly joined.
Again, in Wilder v. Stanley,
And finally, in Drown v. New England T. T. Co. et al.,
In all these cases, it is to be observed, the injury resulted — and could only result — from the combination of the defendants' acts; the act or neglect of one of them would have been wholly innocuous but for the concurring act or negligence of the other. So in the case before us, the existence of the dam by itself caused and could cause no damage, for the ice would not have jammed; and the existence of the piers, alone, caused and could cause no damage, for the water would not be held at a dangerous *340
height. It was only when the two existed together that the water was thrown into the roads. The demurrant relies upon what was said by this Court in Ames v. Dorset Marble Co. et al.,
The second ground of the demurrer is equally unavailing. One need not allege what is necessarily implied in what he does allege. Drown v. New England T. T. Co., supra. Towns are required by law to keep in repair all the highways therein, unless there is some special statutory provision placing that duty, in whole or in part, elsewhere. G.L. 4387; Bacon v. Boston Maine Railroad,
The third and fourth grounds of the demurrer may be considered together. Both are predicated upon the claim that the statutory remedy (G.L. 4643) is exclusive. While towns are not the owners of the highways within their limits, the obligation to keep them in repair gives them such an interest in them as enables them to recover expenditures made necessary by the wrongful act or neglect of an individual or corporation. Bildeman v. State, 110 N.Y. 232, 18 N.E. 115, 1 L.R.A. 258; Steuben v. Lake Shore M.S.Ry. Co.,
Judgment affirmed and cause remanded. *342